best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 36

The Hawthorne Legacy (The Inheritance Games, 2)

When the line went silent, I said Graysonโ€™s name, then Jamesonโ€™s. Again. And again. Nobody heard me. I hung up and called back, but nobody picked up.

No matter how many times I called, no one picked up.

I was worriedโ€”about Grayson, about the barely controlled anger Iโ€™d heard in his fatherโ€™s voice. Beneath that worry, my gut was churning for different reasons.ย What did you do, Harry?

If the fact that Toby Hawthorne had survived the fire had been public knowledge, would his father have been able to bury this scandal? Would the police have been so easy to buy offโ€”assuming theyย hadย been bought offโ€” if this werenโ€™t a tragedy with no survivors?

If he set that fireโ€ฆย I couldnโ€™t think much past that, so I thought about Tobias Hawthorne instead. Why had the billionaire disinherited his entire family after the fire on Hawthorne Island? Why use his will to point to what had happened there, when heโ€™d apparently paid good money to cover it up?

โ€œAvery.โ€ Alisaโ€™s heels hit the pavement with a rapidย click, click, clickย as she approached me. โ€œYou need to get back inside. The live auction is about to start.โ€

 

 

I made it through the rest of the evening. As Max had promised, most of the items in the live auction had been donated byโ€ฆ me. A weeklong stay in a four-bedroom house on Abaco, in the Bahamas. Two weeks in Santorini, Greece, private plane included. A castle in Scotland to be used as a wedding venue.

โ€œHow many vacation homes do youย have?โ€ Max asked me on the way

home.

I shook my head. โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

โ€œYou could actually look at the binder I gave you,โ€ Alisa suggested from the front seat.

I barely heard her, but that night, after Iโ€™d placed another six fruitless phone calls and spent hours turning the conversation with Graysonโ€™s father over in my head, I slipped out of bed and walked to my desk. The binder in question was just sitting there. Alisa had given it to me weeks ago, as a primer on my inheritance.

I flipped through it until I found myself staring at a villa in Tuscany. A thatched cottage in Bora-Bora. A literal castle in the Scottish Highlands. This wasย unreal. Page after page, I drank in the pictures. Patagonia. Santorini. Kauai. Malta. Seychelles. A flat in London. Apartments in Tokyo and Toronto and New York. Costa Rica. San Miguel de Allendeโ€ฆ

I felt like I was having some kind of out-of-body experience, like it was impossible to feel what I was feeling and still be flesh and blood. My mom and I had dreamed of traveling. Stashed in my enormous closet, in a ratty bag from home, was a stack of blank postcards. Mom and I had imagined going to those places. Iโ€™d wanted to see the world.

And the closest Iโ€™d ever come was postcards.

A ball of emotion rising in my throat, I flipped another pageโ€”and I stopped breathing. The cabin in this photograph looked like it had been built into the side of a mountain. The snow-covered roof was A-line, and dozens of light fixtures lit up the brown stone like lanterns.ย Beautiful.

But that wasnโ€™t what had robbed the breath from my lungs. Every muscle in my chest tightened as I lifted my fingers to the text at the top of the page, where the details of the home were written. It was in the Rocky Mountains, ski in/ski out, eight bedroomsโ€”and the house had a name.

True North.

You'll Also Like